It's all about the learning, even if I don't use my right hand for navigation ijkl feels quite natural. Even now I'm okay with j/k for scrolling but h still feels weird.
I do use w and other forward motions but I admit to being deficient in the matter of backwards motion. And in fact I took a refresher today (well I only remember b but it's a start).
In the beginning when I downvoted the system popped up a message urging me to explain why I do so. The system also seems to count my upvotes to questions and answers and points out when I neglect to vote on questions.
Would it be so hard for the system to pick up when I'm downvoting more than, ...
> There are cases where someone happens across an answer that is just really questionable. The person then goes to the author's history and looks at other answers, while voting down things that they feel are also wrong.
Tim has a point here.
Sometimes when I want to +2 an answer or something, I go look for another answer by that user to +1.
I mean, yes, conceptually, it's not that bad, but since it's also indistinguishable, I feel that the potential abuse is much more than the potential gain
Making that compulsory for everyone takes a lot of resources to flag asdfghjkls or even pre-packaged comments with real words in them. I do agree with @DeadMG that making that compulsory for troublemakers is a good idea.
The problem is that forcing a comment, does not force content. But in this case, the point isn't really to get content, but to expose the troublemaker.
Involuntary commitment or civil commitment is a legal process through which an individual with symptoms of severe mental illness is court-ordered into treatment in a hospital (inpatient) or in the community (outpatient).
Criteria for civil commitment are established by law, which varies between nations and, in the U.S., from state to state. Commitment proceedings often follow a period of emergency hospitalization during which an individual with acute psychiatric symptoms is confined for a relatively short duration (e.g. 72 hours) in a treatment facility for evaluation and stabilization by...
@TonyTheLion: Hehe Actually, I didn't know @sbi was going to post this as an Q on meta, we just had an discussion on the morning wherein we discussed about this, I was pleasantly surprised that he took the pains to raise this up on meta, My thanks are in order for @sbi, for trying to make a meaningful difference.
@StackedCrooked Starting from X-mas 2001 for several years I did not checkin a crashing bug. I did checkin logic bugs and a few exceptions thrown leading to nasty dialogs popping up, but not a single crash. In 2008 I had switched companies, got a crappy piece of code to fix, got lost in its C-ish ways to treat dynamically allocated objects, and did checkin something that crashed on a different platform. I ended up rewriting the whole code.
I could understand it that when exceptions escape certain boundaries, like, say, a Web service, to avoid leaking implementation details that could lead to exploits.
But this is completely internal to the application.
I don't remember what prompted me to write the invalid snippet. I may have toyed with $ and parentheses and got double confused when I wrote the message.
@DeadMG What's wrong with your API is that it is so hideously complex that you can't even decide what's wrong with it after staring at it for a long time.
@LucDanton I'm very fine with topics other than C++, and I have no problems at all with the Haskell fetish so many here have, but you've been at this for almost half an hour at a high volume, essentially spamming the room.
It's dead simple to create your own room, and I'd approve of you poking the usual suspects here for joining you there.
@LucDanton You are missing the point. Whenever two are engaged in a high-volume discussion of some topic that does not seem to be interesting to the rest pf the logged in users, and they are essentially drowning every attempt to create another topic, I have a problem with that, no matter whether it's Haskell, Apple, or sex. (I might react differently if it's half a dozen users.)
@RMartinhoFernandes I'm not criticizing you for having done that, I am asking you to stop it.
@DeadMG Just as you have been pointed out the advantages of a VCS (your checkin comments should tell you whether you have fixed something recently or not), you might need a ticket system pointed out to you.